The European Central Bank announced it is maintaining its three key interest rates unchanged, keeping the deposit facility rate, main refinancing rate, and marginal lending rate at 2.00%, 2.15%, and 2.40% respectively. This decision marks the fifth consecutive monetary policy meeting where the ECB has held rates steady, aligning fully with widespread financial market expectations.
Although Eurozone inflation fell to 1.7% in January, dipping below the central bank's 2% long-term target for the first time, policymakers unanimously agreed that a restrictive monetary policy stance remains necessary. This is due to persistent resilience in services inflation and ongoing pressures from wage growth, which require sustained effort to ensure price stability returns to and remains within the target range.
Core inflation, which excludes volatile energy and food prices, fell in January to its lowest level since late 2021. Separately, the Eurozone's Gross Domestic Product grew by 0.3% in the fourth quarter, slightly exceeding economists' forecasts. In its monetary policy statement released Thursday, the ECB's Governing Council emphasized that the economy "remains resilient amid a challenging global environment," noting low unemployment, increased public and defense investment, and "solid" private sector balance sheets.
Externally, the ECB's decision to maintain the status quo is largely a response to increasingly complex global trade dynamics and exchange rate volatility risks. Recent uncertainty surrounding U.S. government tariff policies and shifting market expectations for Federal Reserve policy have contributed to a notably strong euro against the U.S. dollar. While this currency strength has helped curb imported inflation, it has also pressured the Eurozone's export-dependent trade sector.
Following the widely anticipated decision, the euro held steady, trading slightly weaker on the day just below $1.18. ECB President Christine Lagarde reiterated in the accompanying policy statement that the future path of monetary policy will continue to be strictly guided by a data-dependent approach.
Looking ahead, with internal economic growth momentum still weak and risks of inflation resurgence from global geopolitical tensions remaining significant, the prevailing market view has turned cautious. Most analysts now believe the ECB is likely to maintain its current interest rate floor throughout the 2026 fiscal year, entering an extended observation period. Traders in swap markets continue to price in minimal chances of further benchmark rate cuts this year, estimating only about a 30% probability of a 0.25 percentage point reduction.
An analyst from S&P Global Ratings suggested that, with the strong euro acting as a "shock absorber" and economic growth "continuing to outperform expectations," the ECB can remain on autopilot for now. The ECB's previous rate-cutting cycle began in June 2024, which had brought borrowing costs down to their lowest level since December 2022.